Sunday, March 2, 2008

Tampa Florida Beauty School!!!



Aveda beauty products line the shelves at finer stores and makes the Aveda brand uniquely qualified to develop the next generation of beauty experts.

If you are an aspiring Beauty Consultant, know one, or just want to read more about it. Surf the Aveda Institute Florida for more information.

About Aveda Florida: Aveda Institutes Florida: cosmetology schools and esthiology schools in St. Petersburg & Tallahassee Florida

Saturday, March 1, 2008

Gonzalo Rubalcaba at Yoshi's in March

yoshis bay area blues jack london square, oakland bay area jazz club
Yoshis east bay jazz club and restaurant
Yoshis east bay jazz club and restaurant
Gonzalo Rubalcaba
* Mar 13, 2008 - Mar 16, 2008
* Thurs 8pm $18 & 10pm $12 Fri 8pm $22 & 10pm $16
Sat both shows $22 Sun 7pm $22 & 9pm $16
"Some of the most death-defying piano playing since Art Tatum."
New York Times

One of the most important figures to emerge from Afro-Cuban jazz in the '90s, Gonzalo Rubalcaba is an extraordinarily versatile pianist able to blend disparate strands of Cuban and American jazz tradition into a fresh, modern whole. Rubalcaba demonstrates why Cuban music has become so popular around the world. His lush tropical passion, rhythmic energy and sheer muscle on the piano have all combined to make him a truly unique artist. Rubalcaba returns to Yoshi's Oakland & San Francisco to perform mostly original music that encompasses his synthesis of Latin, Afro-Cuban and jazz musical styles. Rubalcaba displays a blend of technical virtuosity with contemplative interpretations of traditional Cuban themes and imaginative originals.

Kim Nalley Appearing Live this Weekend!




Jazz At Pearl's. Live Jazz Music in San Francisco. 1930s style jazz and supper club
Kim Nalley: The Heart of Lady Day
Nalley sings Billie Holiday

“[T]he difficulty of portraying Billie the singer and the woman has been solved by the presence of vocalist Kim Nalley, who not only sings Lady Day’s numbers wonderfully, but manages to convey something of the sense of her character, by turns demure and tough, as much through suggestion as through any kind of overly studied scheme.”

So said critic Ken Bullock, writing in the Berkeley Daily Planet, of Kim Nalley’s highly acclaimed performance in the recently concluded 8 week run and West Coast premier of C. J. Verburg’s play, Lady Day in Love, a play feelingly dramatizing Holiday’s early career which gave Nalley a chance to strut her stuff, singing fifteen of Lady Day’s best known songs.

For this very special weekend at Pearl’s, Kim Nalley brings the tender side of Holiday to life as she presents “The Heart of Lady Day.” Nalley, in her own unique and heartfelt style, will interpret the songs made famous by Holiday. She’ll be joined by sensitive, bluesy pianist Tammy Hall, swinging guitarist Josh Workman, cool-hand bassist Mike Zisman and steady-swinging drummer Kent Bryson.

Of course, the marvelous Miss Nalley is no stranger to the songs and personna of the great Billie Holiday. Her legion of fans have frequently enjoyed her performances channeling Holiday in her award winning show “Ladies Sing the Blues.” That’s in addition to Nalley’s recent series of triumphant concert tributes to the great Nina Simone, and her many shows in San Francisco and around the world, treating audiences to her own sweet and sassy personna and astounding talents. Tammy Hall piano Josh Workman guitar Kent Bryson drums Michael Zisman bass

This weekend, Live!!!



Jazz At Pearl's. Live Jazz Music in San Francisco. 1930s style jazz and supper club
Kim Nalley: The Heart of Lady Day
Nalley sings Billie Holiday

“[T]he difficulty of portraying Billie the singer and the woman has been solved by the presence of vocalist Kim Nalley, who not only sings Lady Day’s numbers wonderfully, but manages to convey something of the sense of her character, by turns demure and tough, as much through suggestion as through any kind of overly studied scheme.”

So said critic Ken Bullock, writing in the Berkeley Daily Planet, of Kim Nalley’s highly acclaimed performance in the recently concluded 8 week run and West Coast premier of C. J. Verburg’s play, Lady Day in Love, a play feelingly dramatizing Holiday’s early career which gave Nalley a chance to strut her stuff, singing fifteen of Lady Day’s best known songs.

For this very special weekend at Pearl’s, Kim Nalley brings the tender side of Holiday to life as she presents “The Heart of Lady Day.” Nalley, in her own unique and heartfelt style, will interpret the songs made famous by Holiday. She’ll be joined by sensitive, bluesy pianist Tammy Hall, swinging guitarist Josh Workman, cool-hand bassist Mike Zisman and steady-swinging drummer Kent Bryson.

Of course, the marvelous Miss Nalley is no stranger to the songs and personna of the great Billie Holiday. Her legion of fans have frequently enjoyed her performances channeling Holiday in her award winning show “Ladies Sing the Blues.” That’s in addition to Nalley’s recent series of triumphant concert tributes to the great Nina Simone, and her many shows in San Francisco and around the world, treating audiences to her own sweet and sassy personna and astounding talents. Tammy Hall piano Josh Workman guitar Kent Bryson drums Michael Zisman bass

Friday, February 29, 2008

Don't miss out on your stimulus payment


Don't miss out on your stimulus payment


Don't miss out on your stimulus payment


IRS TAX TIP 2008-Special Edition

Are you wondering what to do to ensure that you receive your economic stimulus payment which the IRS will begin to send out this May? In most cases you will not have to do anything extra. If you are eligible for a payment, all you have to do is file a 2007 tax return and the IRS will do the rest.

However, recipients of Social Security, certain Veterans' and Railroad Retirement benefits and low-income workers who don’t normally need to file may have to take steps to insure receipt of the stimulus payment.

If you are in this group and normally would not be required to file a tax return, you need to file a 2007 tax return this year to receive an economic stimulus payment. The return must show at least $3000 in qualifying income.

Qualifying income includes Social Security benefits, certain Railroad Retirement benefits, certain veterans’ benefits and earned income, such as income from wages, salaries, tips and self-employment. While these people may not be normally required to file a tax return because they do not meet the filing requirement, the IRS emphasizes they must file a 2007 return in order to receive a payment.

The IRS has released a sample version of a Form 1040A that highlights the simple, specific sections of the return that can be filled out by people in these categories to qualify for a stimulus payment.

For more information see IRS Fact Sheet FS 2008-16 Stimulus Payments: Instructions for Low-Income Workers and Recipients of Social Security and Certain Veterans’ Benefits available on www.irs.gov.

Be aware that identity thieves are already pushing scams involving the stimulus payments. At least one telephone scam is making the rounds using the proposed rebates as bait. IRS news release IR-2008-11,”IRS Warns of New E-Mail and Telephone Scams Using the IRS Name; Advance Payment Scams Starting,” has more details.

Remember that for the genuine IRS Web site be sure to use .gov. Don't be confused by internet sites that end in .com, .net, .org or other designations instead of .gov. The address of the official IRS governmental Web site is www .irs.gov.

Links:

Economic Stimulus Payments Information Center

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Best And Worst Cities For Renters



In Pictures: Least Expensive Cities For Renters - Forbes.com


Real Estate
Best And Worst Cities For Renters
Matt Woolsey, 01.07.08,
6:00 PM ET

Writing a monthly rent check often feels like lighting money on
fire. You'll never again see that cash, you build no equity and there
are no tax benefits.

But renting makes sense to those unwilling
or unable to buy a home in an uncertain housing market. The number of
such Americans seems to be growing; last month mortgage applications
fell to their lowest level in a year.

That's good news for landlords--especially those in New York City and San Francisco. In these cities, tenants pay the highest rents in the country by a significant margin.

Read the full article at:
http://www.forbes.com/2008/01/07/rentals-US-expensive-forbeslife-cx_mw_0107realestate.html




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Sunday, January 27, 2008

NHPrimary.com: Dems like Medicare modeled health plan



NHPrimary.com: Dems like Medicare modeled health plan

logo
Dems like Medicare modeled health plan
Published: Tuesday, January 22, 2008

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR
Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON – Hillary Rodham Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards have been sniping at each other for months over health care, but there's one thing the top Democratic presidential candidates agree on: Americans of all ages should have the choice of buying a government-run insurance plan modeled on Medicare.

The idea, which would set up a competition between a new government plan and private insurance programs, has been overshadowed by the political horse race. But it's one of the most far-reaching and controversial proposals for making health insurance more affordable and more widely available.

Until now the government has guaranteed access to health care only for seniors and the disabled through Medicare and for the poor mainly through Medicaid. Under the proposals being advanced by Sens. Clinton, of New York, and Obama, of Illinois, and former Sen. Edwards, of North Carolina, the government would offer coverage for middle-class workers and their families, with comprehensive benefits comparable to those now provided for federal employees and members of Congress.

Participation in the government alternative would be voluntary, but the approach sparks widely differing reactions.

Mark B. McClellan, the former Medicare administrator in the Bush administration, called it a risky departure from the state-based reforms that the Democratic candidates have cited as their models.

What McClellan and other critics say they fear is that the government plan could underbid private insurers and, if large numbers of people sign up, it could eventually replace private coverage, including the employer-sponsored plans that now serve most middle-class Americans.

Despite these concerns, other respected experts say that giving people the option of joining a government plan might make for a sensible experiment.

"It could be a really fair way to test the market, both in terms of people's preferences and to see what kind of plan can be more successful over time," said health economist Marilyn Moon, a trustee of Medicare and Social Security during the Clinton administration. "It depends on the details, as these things always do."



For example, Moon suggested that a government plan could be used to test many of the latest ideas for reducing waste and improving quality, such as cutting payments for treatments of dubious value and rewarding hospitals and doctors that can document improved results in patient care.

"You could allow a government option as a way of setting a standard, as opposed to issuing lots of regulations that would apply to every insurer," she said.

Republican presidential candidates also have health care plans, but – in keeping with conservative principles – they rely on market forces, economic incentives and the private sector to increase access to medical insurance and try to rein in costs. None favors creation of a government alternative to private health-care programs.

GOP opposition is not the only political obstacle to the Democratic idea.

The insurance industry, one of the nation's most powerful lobbies, is against it. "It is a move to significantly expand the role of government and move people off private coverage and to public coverage," Karen Ignagni, president of America's Health Insurance Plans and the industry's top lobbyist in Washington, said.

Another critic is GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney, who as governor of Massachusetts signed bipartisan legislation to provide coverage for all state residents – a model for the Democratic candidates.

"You can call (the government plan) an option, but if you don't put any restrictions on who can enroll, and you give the government leverage in terms of ability to negotiate prices, you create a situation that leads to a government-run system," said Lanhee J. Chen, Romney's domestic-policy advisor.

Clinton, Obama and Edwards dismiss the charge that they are trying to introduce the camel's nose of government-run health care under the tent of health reform.

"Hillary never supported a single-payer system, not even in the early 1990s," said Neera Tanden, Clinton's health-policy adviser. "She has always supported a plan to build on what we have in our healthcare system." (Only one Democratic candidate, Ohio Rep. Dennis J. Kucinich, favors switching to a full-blown government-run system.)

"The charge that this is socialized medicine is ridiculous," said Austan Goolsbee, a University of Chicago economist advising Obama. "This would remain one choice among many, and you don't have to pick it. You can pick a private option, or insurance through your employer."

The candidates' plans differ in some important provisions, and certain key details are not yet spelled out. But Clinton, Obama and Edwards follow the same basic framework.

As a starting point, they would create new insurance-purchasing pools through which individuals, families and businesses would have the option of buying coverage from a broad range of commercial insurers – or the new government plan.

Private insurers who wished to participate in the pools would not be allowed to turn people down because of previous health problems, and the insurers would be limited in how much they could raise premiums to account for a person's age and other factors that can affect health. All the plans in the pool would have to offer a minimum standard benefit package, which would likely be keyed to the government plan.

Individuals and families eligible for government subsidies through the candidates' health-reform plans would be able to use that assistance to buy either a private plan or the government coverage.

Businesses would be allowed to participate in the purchasing pools and enroll employees in the government plan. However, in Obama's plan, participation would be limited to small companies and individuals who don't have access to employer coverage.

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Most health-care costs are incurred by the sickest patients. In any given year, about 10 percent of the population accounts for more than 60 percent of health-care costs – a statistic that partly explains why insurers go to great lengths to avoid issuing policies to people with medical problems.

Edwards' policy director, James Kvaal, said he would insist on regulations to prevent private carriers from dumping their sickest patients into the government's care. "We will stop private insurance companies from competing by weeding out the sickest people," said Kvaal.

But what if those patients – weary of dealing with private insurers – sought out the government plan as a haven? Rules for insurers might not protect the government plan in such a situation. Instead, lawmakers might have to wade into the complex business of trying to adjust premiums between the government plan and the private policies.

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The candidates acknowledge that their plans are broad brush strokes for now, and important details would have to be decided with Congress. Nonetheless, the consensus among the three means that if a Democrat is elected, a new government insurance plan for the middle class could well be part of the strategy for tackling one of the nation's most worrisome problems.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Free Online Game Download & Play now! from NCSOFT


Free Online Game Download & Play now! from NCSOFT

Dungeon Runners™